Kick It Out has called for Manchester United fans to stop the “racist” chant about their new striker.

If you’re thinking of singing the Lukaku chant this weekend, history should convince you otherwise

Independent.ie

At their last Premier League match, a section of Manchester United’s fans defied the requests of the club, Romelu Lukaku and anti-discrimination body Kick It Out by continuing to chant about the size of Lukaku’s penis.

At their last Premier League match, a section of Manchester United’s fans defied the requests of the club, Romelu Lukaku and anti-discrimination body Kick It Out by continuing to chant about the size of Lukaku’s penis.

With United playing at home this weekend against Crystal Palace, and the striker likely to feature again, will those fans continue to sing against the club and player’s wishes?

MUFC fans sing the Lukaku song they have been asked not to sing - followed by the chant of 'We're Man United, we'll sing what we want'

The song relies on a generalisation about black men, and while some attempt to justify it by saying it’s a compliment, a look at the history of the stereotype suggests that isn’t true.

“I think a lot of it is that people don’t really understand where these stereotypes come from,” said Chisomo Kalinga PhD, a researcher in the medical humanities at the University of Edinburgh.

Romelu Lukaku scores against Southampton

Kalinga researches representations of health and wellbeing in an African context, and has interest in the sexual representations of the black body.

And when it comes to the reasons why the chant is offensive, she explains it has everything to do with the history of the treatment of the black body.

“Such discourses are deeply rooted in colonialist/slavery era perceptions of the hypersexualised black body,” she said. “Which often was fetishised in early representations of pornography.

“I think when people participate in these chants, some are not aware that they are partaking in discrimination, which appears covert, but actually feeds into historical stereotypes of the sexual threat of the black man.

“However, this does not excuse those who actively know that they are purposefully promoting stereotypes of black men.

“The stereotype was that the black body was more sexual than intelligent, and that was very pervasive, especially in some of the earlier forms of pornography.

“In what they called stag films, of the late 19th/early 20th century, a lot of them were silent films of black men who were very largely endowed.

“It was a real huge point of fascination with the black body.”

Manchester United striker Romelu Lukaku

This idea that black people’s sexuality was their most prominent characteristic, rather than intelligence for example, is clearly a damaging one, but as Kalinga explains, the demonisation of the black body, both male and female, went further still.

“There was a South African woman called Saartjie Baartman who actually was taken from South Africa at the turn of the 18th century and brought to Europe to participate in freak shows because of the size of her bottom,” said Kalinga.

“She was seen as so grotesque but also sexually fascinating, because she was different: she had a very large bottom.

“When she died in Europe she was subjected to a gruesome dissection to find out what made her so different physically.

“With the eugenics in the Victorian age and these ideas of Africans being sexually not able to control themselves, but also being physically different – bigger breasts, bigger bottoms, bigger penises – that was the discourse, that they were by nature sexually deviant and lecherous.”

And those ideas transferred into language of their own, with terms used to describe the supposed sexual deviance of the black body.

“The contemporary slang terms are ‘mandingo’ and ‘jezebel’, for the black man and the black woman,” said Kalinga.

“‘Mandingo’ means well-endowed sexual predator, and the ‘jezebel’ is an over-sexual predatorial black woman, so these are deeply entrenched terms that go back to these periods where the interpretations were that these people needed to be controlled because they were thought to be completely sexually reckless.

“These beliefs about the black body and black sexuality were used to justify beliefs that whites were a superior race and used the physical attributes of black bodies and perceptions about sexual savagery to justify colonialism and slavery.”

Manchester United striker Romelu Lukaku

And so to 2017 – it remains to be seen whether the chant will continue to be sung or whether Manchester United fans will heed the warnings of the club – but why did it start in the first place?

“I think that for these chanters, they tend to think that this focus on being ‘well-endowed’ is a compliment in the same way that women are often told that street harassment is a form of compliment and just blokes being blokes,” said Kalinga.

“The chant’s focus on Lukaku’s genitals reduces him to the stereotype of the ‘black mandingo’,” she continued.

“And the player’s right to be respected should be enforced by Manchester United, even if they are not aware of the harmful historical context.”